In Too Deep

Class and Mothering in a Flooded Community

English language

Published Jan. 19, 2021 by University of California Press.

ISBN:
978-0-520-97643-6
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5 stars (1 review)

In a small Texas neighborhood, an affluent group of mothers has been repeatedly rocked by catastrophic flooding—the 2015 Memorial Day flood, the 2016 Tax Day flood, and sixteen months later, Hurricane Harvey. Yet even after these disrupting events, almost all mothers in this neighborhood still believe there is only one place for them to live: Bayou Oaks.

In Too Deep is a sociological exploration of what happens when climate change threatens the carefully curated family life of upper-middle-class mothers. Through in-depth interviews with thirty-six Bayou Oaks mothers whose homes flooded during Hurricane Harvey, Rachel Kimbro reveals why these mothers continued to stay in a place that was becoming more and more unstable. Rather than retreating, the mothers dug in and sustained the community they have chosen and nurtured, trying to keep social, emotional, and economic instability at bay. In Too Deep provides a glimpse into how class and place intersect …

3 editions

reviewed In Too Deep by Rachel Kimbro

Gripping study of multiply-flooded upper middle class mothers

5 stars

Engaging, fluently-written work of narrative sociology, based on in-depth interviews with 30+ affluent mothers in an aspirational urban neighbourhood in Houston, Texas. Kimbro seeks an answer to why, despite everything they've been through, a majority of the mothers interviewed decided to remain in this community, despite its clear vulnerabilities. Accessible to a more general readership, without sacrificing academic rigour, and a useful insight into the social 'stickiness' of place, and how natural disasters (and, by extension, climate change) are experienced along intersecting axes of wealth, class, and gender.